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Duck It!

Duck It! follows Lionel Romero, one of the few survivors of a world crushed by a fast and merciless sickness. He leaves his dead parents’ home in Florida and heads toward the Midwest, writing about the trip in a plain notebook. The story blends road travel with emotional fallout, and it traces how he sees the ruined world around him while digging into the memories that shaped him. The book moves between his present journey and his old hurts, which come alive again as he confronts fear, quiet, and the strange freedom of having almost no one left.

I was pulled in by the voice. It is raw, jumpy, funny in dark ways, and full of chaotic honesty. The writing has a rhythm that hits hard because Lionel keeps drifting between bold thoughts and quiet self-doubt. I appreciated how the author let him ramble, swear, and laugh at himself. Sometimes the scenes hit me with this weird mix of dread and warmth, like when Lionel finds comfort in silence or when he sees animals in the open fields and suddenly feels joy. I enjoyed that emotional swing. It made the world feel alive even though most of the people in it are dead.

The idea of being forced into a life you never chose, which Lionel describes through his years working under the Florida sun, came through with sharp detail. The book lingers on resentment. It lingers on guilt. It lingers on that strange sense of floating through your own life. Those moments felt personal. When he describes seeing the dead family on the road, I felt this heavy pressure in my chest. The scene pushed me to imagine what he was too scared to say straight out. The story works best in those places where the emotion sits just under the surface.

By the end, I felt like I understood Lionel’s loneliness, even if he masks it with jokes, curses, and stubborn pride. The book struck me as a study of what a person becomes when the whole world falls apart, and it does this without trying to be poetic or grand. It is simple in its words and messy in its feelings. That mix gives it a strong pull. I kept wanting to hear more of Lionel’s voice.

I would recommend Duck It! to readers who enjoy intimate, voice-driven fiction. Anyone drawn to end-of-the-world stories that feel grounded in real emotion would appreciate this book. It suits those who like flawed narrators, rough humor, and a story that cares more about the person than the plot.

Pages: 315 | ASIN : B0GDS32354

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